French Ways and Their Meaning Quotes

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French Ways and Their Meaning French Ways and Their Meaning by Edith Wharton
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“If the ability to read carries the average man no higher than the gossip of his neighbours, if he asks nothing more nourishing out of books and the theatre than he gets hanging about the store, the bar and the street-corner, then culture is bound to be dragged down to him instead of his being lifted up by culture.”
Edith Wharton, French Ways and Their Meaning
“Intelligent and cultivated people of either sex will never limit themselves to communing with their own households. Men and women equally, when they have the range of interests that real cultivation gives, need the stimulus of different points of view, the refreshment of new ideas as well as of new faces. The long hypocrisy which Puritan England handed on to America concerning the danger of frank and free social relations between men and women has done more than anything else to retard real civilisation in America.”
Edith Wharton, French Ways and Their Meaning
“There is nothing like a Revolution for making people conservative.”
Edith Wharton, French Ways and Their Meaning
“Real civilisation means an education that extends to the whole of life, in contradistinction to that of school or college: it means an education that forms speech, forms manners, forms taste, forms ideals, and above all forms judgment.”
Edith Wharton, French Ways and Their Meaning
“If the collective life which results from our individual money-making is not richer, more interesting and more stimulating than that of countries where the individual effort is less intense, then it looks as if there were something wrong about our method.”
Edith Wharton, French Ways and Their Meaning